- USS Nehenta Bay (CVE-74)
USS "Nehenta Bay" (CVE–74) was an "Casablanca" class
escort carrier of theUnited States Navy .She was launched by Kaiser Shipbuilding Co.,
Vancouver, Washington ,28 November 1943 , underMaritime Commission contract: sponsored by Mrs. Robert H. Smith; acquired3 January 1944 : and commissioned atAstoria, Oregon , the same day, Captain Horace A. Butterfield in command."Nehenta Bay" made her shakedown cruise from
San Francisco Bay toPearl Harbor 6 February to12 February 1944 , carrying replacement aircrews and planes. She put intoSan Diego 21 February with damaged planes returned from combat zones for repair. After further West Coast training, she sailed for Pearl Harbor18 March , again with replacement aircraft and aviation materiel, added to her lading inHawaii , and reachedMajuro 7 April to deliver mail, men, and aircraft to fast carriers moored there. She returned to San Diego from Majuro and Pearl Harbor27 April , bringing home wounded and other passengers, along with damaged aircraft.After combat readiness training off California and in Hawaii, "Nehenta Bay" left Pearl Harbor
18 June for theMarianas assault, staging at Eniwetok late in the month. With TF 51, her planes flew antisubmarine and combat air patrols during operations againstTinian , which they strafed5 July and7 July , blasting gun emplacements and a sugar refinery. Returning to Eniwetok16 July to refuel and replenish, "Nehenta Bay" next sailed, with "Midway" and 12 destroyers, for antisubmarine and combat air patrols off Guam and Saipan, striking targets on the latter.Next assigned to escort fleet oilers during at-sea replenishment operations, "Nehenta Bay" played an essential part in the 3rd Fleet's victory-winning operations from August 1944 through January 1945. The ships she guarded made it possible for the fast carriers to remain at sea for extended periods, smashing at targets in the Carolines and
Philippines , on Formosa, and on the Chinese coast. Such attacks in turn made possible the capture of thePalaus , and the return to the Philippines.With Manus and
Ulithi as her bases, "Nehenta Bay" faithfully and tirelessly protected her vulnerable charges, fighting through the December typhoon despite heavy damage and shooting down a Japanese attacker12 January 1945 . She returned to San Diego19 February for overhaul, refreshed her training in Hawaiian waters, then qualified new aviators offGuam before arriving at Ulithi9 May to prepare for strikes onOkinawa . Her planes flew patrols and made direct strikes on enemy positions to aid fighting men ashore, blasting the Japanese from eaves and ridges. Her formation came under kamikaze attack7 June , when two of her sisters were crashed.From the end of June through early August, "Nehenta Bay" again guarded oilers as they served the 3rd Fleet in its climactic raids against
Japan itself. She was en route to operations in theAleutians when hostilities ended, and her task force sailed31 August for occupation duties around Japan, patrolling and dropping supplies to prisoners of war. She returned to Pearl Harbor24 September to disembark her air squadron and all aviation equipment and gasoline, thus making room for passengers. She sailed30 September to embark homeward-bound troops in the Marshalls, and with them reached San Francisco in mid-October. In November she sailed to the Philippines on similar duty, returning to the West Coast27 November . Sailing via thePanama Canal , "Nehenta Bay" arrived Boston31 January 1946 for inactivation. She decommissioned and entered reserve atBoston 15 May 1946 . Reclassified CVU–74 on12 June 1955 and AKV–24 on7 May 1959 , "Nehenta Bay" was sold to Coalmarket, Inc.,29 June 1960 and scrapped."Nehenta Bay" received 7
battle star s forWorld War II service.References
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